Crypto Trade Profit, Risk and Tax Calculator
Model famous coins with live prices, market candles, entry and exit targets, fees, taxes, stop loss, take profit, leverage, and risk/reward scenarios.
Live market chart
Recent hourly candles with your trade levels| Scenario | Exit | Move | Gross P/L | Fees | Tax | Net P/L |
|---|
Educational estimate only. It does not predict market movement or include slippage, liquidation, funding rates, borrowing costs, tax rules, or exchange-specific execution.
Use the profit calculator before the trade.
This page is built for planning, not hype. Use it to see whether a trade still makes sense after fees, taxes, leverage, stop-loss distance, and take-profit assumptions are included.
For spot trades
Estimate the result of buying a coin and selling later at a target price.
- Enter investment amount, entry price, exit price, and trading fee.
- Compare net profit with the actual dollar risk.
- Check whether the trade needs an unrealistic price move to be worthwhile.
For leveraged trades
Leverage changes exposure, profit, and loss faster than many beginners expect.
- Use the leverage field to model amplified position size.
- Review the stop-loss scenario before increasing leverage.
- Open the liquidation calculator before placing any leveraged order.
For tax-aware planning
Taxes can turn a headline gain into a smaller real result.
- Use the tax field as a planning assumption, not a filing answer.
- Keep exchange exports and wallet records for real reporting.
- Read the tax page before relying on calculator estimates.
How to read the outputs.
The calculator separates the trade into live price, net profit or loss, ROI, break-even price, and risk/reward. That makes it easier to see whether a setup is attractive after costs instead of only asking whether the chart looks good.
Key fields
| Output | What it means | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Net P/L | Estimated profit or loss after trading fees and tax assumption. | Shows the result closer to what you may actually keep. |
| ROI | Net result divided by your invested capital. | Lets you compare trades of different sizes. |
| Break-even | Approximate exit price needed to cover fees. | Helps reveal trades where the target barely clears costs. |
| Risk / Reward | Take-profit outcome compared with stop-loss outcome. | Shows whether the upside justifies the downside. |
What this calculator does not know.
No public calculator can know your exact exchange fill, tax status, liquidity, funding costs, local rules, borrowing costs, or slippage. Treat the result as a planning model, then confirm the final quote inside the exchange or wallet where you will execute.
Adjust these assumptions yourself
- Trading fee tier, maker/taker fee, and spread.
- Stop-loss and take-profit distance from entry.
- Tax percentage used for planning.
- Leverage, margin mode, funding rate, and liquidation risk.
- Slippage for illiquid coins or large order sizes.
Example: checking if a target is worth the risk.
Use the example below as a process. Replace every number with your own exchange quote before acting.
Imagine a trader is considering a $1,000 Ethereum trade. The entry is based on the current live price, the target is 8% higher, the stop is 5% lower, the fee assumption is 0.20%, and tax on profit is modeled at 15%. The calculator helps answer whether the possible net gain is large enough compared with the stop-loss outcome.
Decision checklist
- If the net profit is small after fees and taxes, the trade may not justify the risk.
- If the stop loss is too close to normal volatility, the trade may exit before the idea has time to work.
- If leverage is required to make the profit look attractive, check liquidation and funding costs first.
- If the coin has thin liquidity, add a larger slippage assumption before trusting the result.
A better trade workflow.
Use this page as part of a sequence so one optimistic number does not drive the whole decision.
1. Start with live price
Select the coin and let the calculator load current market data. If the API is unavailable, enter the exact price from your exchange manually.
2. Add realistic costs
Enter trading fees, tax assumptions, leverage, and expected stop-loss distance. Small costs matter when the target is small.
3. Compare scenarios
Review stop loss, base exit, and take profit together. A professional trade plan includes what happens if the idea is wrong.
4. Check liquidation
If leverage is above 1x, use the liquidation tool before entering the trade. Profit planning without liquidation risk is incomplete.
5. Review ROI later
After the trade closes, use the ROI calculator to review performance, fees, drawdown, and whether the decision process improved.
6. Save records
Keep date, time, pair, entry, exit, fees, order IDs, and wallet or exchange records for future review and tax preparation.
Related crypto tools.
Profit is only one piece of the decision. These tools help check the risks around the trade.
Profit calculator FAQ.
Short answers for using the tool responsibly and avoiding common mistakes.
Does this calculator predict crypto prices?
No. It models outcomes from the inputs you provide. The chart and live price help with context, but the calculator does not forecast the market.
Why is my exchange result different from the calculator?
Exchange results can differ because of spreads, maker/taker fees, liquidity, slippage, funding rates, borrowing costs, order type, and execution timing.
Should I include tax in every trade estimate?
Use the tax field as a planning assumption if taxes may apply to your situation. Actual tax treatment depends on your records, jurisdiction, holding period, and professional guidance.
Can I use this for leverage trading?
You can model leverage exposure here, but you should also use the liquidation calculator and understand margin mode, maintenance margin, funding rates, and exchange rules before trading.
What is a good risk/reward ratio?
There is no universal number. Many traders want potential reward to be meaningfully larger than the planned loss, but the quality of the setup, volatility, fees, and execution risk matter too.
What should beginners avoid?
Avoid ignoring fees, entering random tax percentages, using leverage to make a weak trade look better, and planning only the winning scenario.
Use this with related trading tools
Profit estimates are stronger when you also check performance, fees, and records.
